MORNING WATCH 



^ Naivalibc. 



Say to them that are of n fearful heart 
Be strong , fear not. 



fl.,^Lt^ hr^: 



NEW YORK: 

PUBLISHED FOR THE AUTHOR, 
BY 

GEORGE P. PUTNAM, 155 BROADWAY. 



75 as^'i 



Entered, according to Act of Congress, in the year 1850, by 

G. P. PUTNAM, 

for the Author, in the Clerk's Office of the District Court of the 
Southern District of New York. 



Planted by William Oubvi 
Tribune Buildings, 



TO 

TUE MEMORY 

OF ONE 

VVnO I, IVETH THE LIFE IMMORTAL 

IN THAT BEAUTIFUL COUNTRY 

WHERE IS NO NIGHT 

ON LAND OR SEA. 



PEE F A C E. 

And thus spake he : — 

It was an hundred years ago : 

I tell the tale as it was told to me : 

Many are going, and many will go, 

But they for evermore pass'd on 

An hundred years ago. 

Many are going, and many will go, 

But whither, oh whither, who shall know ? 



4'iirt \\}t /irst. 



THE MORNING WATCH. 

I. 

In silence and sadness, cometh the Night ; 
In joy and gladness, cometh the Night ; 
In glory, majesty, and might, 

Cometh the Night ! 

But tell me again : what of the Night ? 
Has it a look of calm delight ? 
Are the watchers out ? are the winds asleep ? 
How looks the sky ? what saith the deep ? 

Silently the Night comes on : 

The first of the moon and last of the sun 

Are blended that they seem but one ; 
1* 



10 THE MORNING WATCH. 

The stars are few that out of the blue 
The high and scattering haze look through ; 
But a small white cloud, its plumes scarce 

stirr'd, 
Lies afloat below like a white-wing'd bird, 
Where up and down from the quiet sea 
The lightning playeth noiselessly. 
The little white cloud would be at rest, 
It hath couched its head and smooth'd its 

breast, 
But sleepeth not ; for aye and ever 

And whithersoever. 
As willeth the wind, it fain must do. 
Falling away like a ship hove-to ; 
And momently, as it falls away, 
The voiceless thought of the busy day 
Around its weary head doth play. 
Thus of the Night : the stars are few, 
The scattering haze it hides the blue ; 



THE MO K NINO WATCH. 11 

The sea is murmuring deep, not loud, 

The hghtning plays with the little white cloud, 

And only the voices, gentle and meet 

For the ear of the Night will the wind repeat ; 

For the wind it cometh from there-away, 

And only this has the wind to say : 

The Night comes silently. 

What more of the Night? Has it a power 
To shadow forth the changeless hour — 
The midnight-hour of a night to some. 
Whose morning light shall never come ? 
What saith the Night ? 

Silent and voiceless, answering not, 
But wdth a noiseless step, like one 
Whose eye thou durst not look upon, 
Oh ! fearfully the Night comes on ! 



12 THE MORNING WATCH. 

For out of the darkness and the gloom 
Shall come to thee in thy lonely room, 
The secret thought and vision of dread : 
And forms of the living, with looks of the dead. 
Shall rise about thy desolate bed ; 
And fearful words be whispered there 
Of a Night whose endless watches are 
Ever in darkness and despair ; 
And ever changing, ever the same, 
Remorse, and terror, and guilt, and shame ; 
Ever the same, the vision of dread. 
Ever the same, the face of the dead, 
And ever the same, and over all, 
Speechless, hopeless, like a pall, 
The look of woe unutterable ! 

Look yet once more, and let thine eye 
Soar upward and beyond the sky. 



THE MORNING WATCH. 13 

Comes there a morning ever bright, 

A morning of Eternal Light ! 

What of the stars that gem the Night ? 



Messengers they, come down to say. 
That God's bright Heaven lies there-away ! 
Oh ! gently and kindly the Night cometh on ; 
Like unto one who waiteth upon 
The sick and the dying, the weary and sad ; 
One whose coming shall make thee glad ! 
For till the morrow the cares that press 
And weigh thee down with weariness, 
The doubt and fear which are ever near 
In a life which is but sad at best ; 
The wordless grief and fruitless quest, 
And trouble and sorrow — shall he at rest ; 
And the beautiful Night shall bring to thee 
A promise of that which soon shall be ; 
The vision of a happier home, 



14 THE MORNING WATCH. 

Where care and sorrow shall never come. 
For in glory, and power, and wisdom, and 

might, 
Like the presence of God, cometh the Night ! 

It is enough. It is the home I seek, 
Fair as the light upon yon mountain peak. 
How sharp the line that cuts it from beneath, 
As from a world of shadows and of death ! 
How calmly, grandly, in his place so high, 
The towering headland sits beneath the sky ! 
Oh, sunlight, playing on the mountain's brow. 
Would I were pure as thou ! 
Oh, mountain- top, with thy one crowning 

palm. 
Would I as thou were calm ! 
Oh, sunset glory, would I might with thee 
Thus, day by day, go bless the rounded world, 
Walking upon the Highlands of the earth, 



THE MORNING WATCH. 15 

And ever in thy light baptized be ; 
And as we hnger on each mountain height, 
Unto the darkness that we leave below, 
The pain and sorrow, weariness and woe. 
As gently leave our kind " Good night. 
Goodnight!" 

Thus spake the Traveller on the rock so high, 

So like a picture on the sky ; 

The rock that overhangs the sea ; 

When suddenly, 

As though some hidden train 

Of thought had flashed upon his brain. 

He rose, and with uplifted hands, cried he, 

" Oh, God ! stay Thou the Night !— 

Stay thou the rushing Night, or grant me 

Power to wing my flight 

To travel on with yon bright sun ! — 

Oh, God ! stay thou the Night !" 



16 THE MORNING WATCH. 

Will the Night stay for him ? and will 
The old moon halt upon meridian, 
And sunrise in the west roll up the hill, 
And tarry, as of old, on Ascalon ? 

Look, how the light upon his face 
Reveals through lines of thought and care, 
And look expectant, but resigned, the trace 
Of something other, — not despair. 
But mightier — which, far within, 
Down crushing all the might of sin. 
Dwells calmly on the struggle there ! 

Will the Night stay ? Lo, the sunlight slowly, 
But with an even step, rounds up the 

mountain-top. 
Glowing and rapt, as some pure thing and holy, 
Bound up and homeward, ere Night's curtain 

drop, 



THE M O R N I N li W A I C II . \1 

Till now is left but one small, I'osy spot, 
Close to the heavens — and now again — 'tis 
not! 

But in its stead, comes from the hill, 

And from the waters, and the stars. 

As through dungeon-bars — 

In one quick wave, — the gloom — the chill 

Of Night — Night — the all-surrounding Night ! 

And on, on, the Night moves on — 

Ever and ever towards the sun : 

Westward, ho ! the Night doth go. 

And the little white cloud is following slow 

Westward, ho ! the Night doth go, 

And the pale white stars are following slow ! 

Then said that voice which spake with him 
before, — 



18 THE MORNING WATCH. 

What more, oh, Traveller! would'st thou 

with the day ? 
Its pleasant hours were here — and passed 

away. 
All things move on — what would'st thou 

with the day ? 

And looking up, he answered not, but said, — 

It is enough — the stars will go with me — 
My old companions, they are not yet dim ! 
And the soft wind that comes up from the sea, 
The gentle wind and stars will go with me — 
With the same silent footfall, we 
Will press on to our destiny ! 

But whither would'st thou go, oh Traveller ! 
Who hast companions with the far-off stars ? 



THE MORNING WATCH. 19 

And still he answered not again, 

But sinking to the ground, as if in pain, 

A sudden and convulsive tremor shook 

His old worn limbs, as in a book 

The leaves a wind doth play with — then 

with a look 
Not sad, but tempered, as with joy, he said, 

It may be that my journey's end is near, 
That even now — this night — my travel here — 
Whate'er my home may be, beyond this 

shore, 
Amid the untravelled worlds — shall cease 

and be no more! 
No more to rest by whispering tree or 

stream 
In meadow-lawns, for music to my dreams^ — 
No more go up the valley-aisles that lead 
To the hill-altars of the Lord Most High, 



20 THE M O R N I N G W A T C H . 

And in the motions of the lone stars read 
The path that I must take adown the 

western sky. 
But the night wears : — thou hast ask'd me why 
I love the sunlight better than the Night. 

Dost see the two large stars that in the sun's 

wake lie, 
Where the low tide-wave drifts upon the sky ? 
Look now they dip and flash, — and now go 

down 
Each with its troop of happy worlds around ; 
But sightless in the distance infinite ! 
Those stars and worlds, thou knowest, will 

come again, 
And in their place in Heaven bring as bright 
And pure a glory, as they wear to-night, — 
Look now, far eastward, where above the 

plain 



THE MORNING WATCH. 21 

The mountain-range lies dark ; — Lo ! other 

two 
As bright and glorious, with as much to do, 
And with a path, in Heaven, fair as they — 
Dashing their Hght broad-cast 
Upon their else-dark worlds, roll lightly on 

their way. 
And thus the Heavens are round, and fail 

not any- where ; 
But ever, in all time, each in its path of air, 
The bright and everlasting stars are there ! 
Thus heaven-around, or waking, or asleep. 
Oh in safe arms we sail the glittering deep ; 
For since Creation's morn, no blank hath 

been above, 
And we are good friends, all, — and over all 

is Love ! 

But listen to the sea-bird coming home 



22 THE MORNING WATCH. 

From his long day amid the spray and foam. 
Is there no sadness in that sharp shrill cry ? 
He's coming to his home ; — his little ones 

are nigh ; 
And now, if ever, should his joy be great. 
Ah ! doubtless in his wanderings far and late, 
The sea-bird knoweth pain, and weariness, 
And cold, and hunger, grief, and love's 

distress, 
For who shall tell him that his young ones be 
All safe as when at morn he left them for 

the sea ? 

But thou hast ask'd me whither I would go, — 
If thou would'st hear the history of one, 
Whose life — amid the crowd that day by day 

press on 
The self-same way, — is rare in only this ; 
That it is seldom pictur'd to the world ; 



TKE MORNING WATCn. 23 

Whose only prayer is peace, — and whose 

high hope is 
In a loftier fame ; — then listen now ; 
And if pure thoughts of prayer, and lifting 

words 
Of praise, have strengthen 'd with thee from 

a boy ; 
So that thy happy life, like some sweet bird's, 
Hath been all rich with music and with joy ; — 

Thank God, — and mock not me ! 
And if thus living, safely housed within 
The strong church walls, set free from death 

and sin ; 
If thou within the golden gates canst look 
And read within the Everlasting Book 
Thy name there written ; 
Thank thou the most High God — and judge 

not me. 



24 THE MORNING WATCH. 

And turning Eastwaixi, — his dark eyes 
Gleaming like light in tropic skies, 
'Twas thus spake he. 



II. 



There is a small deeji sea, 
Mountain-surrounded, save where south- 
ward through 
The cleft-hills you may see far down the blue 
Of the outer ocean ; likewise the light 
Of high, calm riding seas, uplifted like white 
Hands in benediction — tropic seas, 
Midway the Persian and the Bengalese — 
That roll in flush, and warm, 
And broad-lunged, as from some late storm ; 
Some headlong fray, or Ocean-carnival, 
Upon the borders equatorial, 
Amid the Ocean-Pampas, where all 
Life glows full and tense ; and from the poles. 
Poised equally, the balanced world rolls 



26 THE MORNING WATCH. 

Down the deeps, sunward for ever, 

Smiting the ether, as a blade the air — 

But here, within 

The everlasting hills, and from the din 

And outward tumult all secure, 

A haven found, a rest at last made sure. 

And home so quiet by the grassy shore. 

The weary seas, far-travelled, sail no more. 

Oh, very beautiful is that quiet sea ! 
Calm as a child on bended knee, 
That whether waking or half-sleeping, 
Trusts so surely in God's keeping ; 
Murmuring its great thanks so lowly, 
Yet urging its warm love so boldly ; 
Pausing with the low " Amen," 
To whisper to its God, " Good night !" 
As to some friend 'twill see again, 
And welcome with the morning light ! 



THE MOKNING WATCH. 27 

Far inland, in the billowy tract 

Of mountains crowding to the sky, 

Is heard a wondrous cataract, 

Loud calling to the outer sea ; 

Like thunder, when the clouds run high — 

In broken speech of pomps and wars. 

And of the generations born, 

Since first, with all the morning stars, 

It shouted at Creation's morn ; 

As a dreamer tells in his troubled sleep. 

Solemnly tells himself, as news, 

The strange and wonderful things he does. 

Silently, upon the mountains, 

Up above the gleaming fountains, 

As on the battlements and walls 

Of some huge fort, like sentinels, 

In their light ranks the white clouds stand, 

And in a circle belt the land ; 



28 THE MORNING WATCH. 

And mostly is the air so still, 

You hear but only from the hill 

The fountain's leap, and from the sea 

The deep tone of its lullaby : 

Or the grand movement, deep and hoarse, 

Of the Cataract's discourse. 

And every day the crimson rise 

And silver setting of the sun, 

Play up and down the sapphire skies, 

Until the golden day is done ; 

For all between, the air, the sky, 

The mountains dim, the sounding sea, 

And sentry clouds, dwell peacefully. 

But we who lived within that land 
Were but as children on a strand. 
Whom shells, and grasses, and wild flowers, 
Led wandering through the dreamy hours ; 



THE MORNING WATCH. 29 

And whose so happy Hfe was all made up 
Of but one mixture, brimming all the cup ; 
A wonder — a sweet wonder at all things, 
Fresh every morning ; as a bird that sings 
And newly ever, an unwritten melody ; 
And, with a guess, which was a prophecy, 
A feeling as of joy that everywhere 
Flew, like a living thing, through all the 

summer air! 
Then, of the sun, to know that it was warm, 
And of the lightning that it brought the storm, 
And of the gold and silver clouds, that they 
Had fashions of their own, and pass'd away, — 
All this seem'd quite enough, for children at 

their play. 

Now in those days, one morning glorious, 
An old grey man came down the mountain- 
side. 



30 THE MORNING WATCH. 

And from the lands beyond the seas, 

The Headlands of the Earth, where night 

broods wide. 
And crimson-lighted, as o'er Hebrides, — 
Brought down the glad news of a God in 

Heaven ! 
The High and Holy One, 
To whom, of old, all majesty was given ; 
In whom hath been, and is, and shall be ever. 
The joy, and glory, of all things for ever ! 

Then suddenly, but slowly, a most rare 
And graspless beauty, — fused thro' all the air — 
Folded itself about the rounded world ; 
Which, ever looking unto Him above, 
Roll'd in still glories wondering as a child, 
And comely like a countenance made fair, 
And radiantly beautiful with love ! 
Then, day by day, the crimson rise, 



THE MORNING WATCH. 31 

And silver setting of the sun, 

Were as Angels in the Skies, 

From that High and Holy One ; 

Angels two, who from on high. 

Brought down our morning to the sky, 

And when its light was dimm'd, and far 

In the blue Heaven flashed the star, 

The first bright star of the evening, — 

Long-lingering above the west. 

With faces mute and sad, but peaceful still, 

and bless'd, 
Rais'd slow their fading wings, and bore it 

to its rest ! 

Upon the margin of that sea, 
Where closely down the grass was green. 
And bright with scented blossoms, she 
Who was the glory of that scene, 
Look'd daily in my eyes, to read 



32 THE MORNING -VTATCH. 

What those two Angels said to me ; 

And daily as their flashing feet, 

Upon the mountains, far and fleet, 

Stepp'd light and free ; 

She went dowai to the water's brim, 

And in the first light pale and dim, 

Kneeling upon the snowy sands, 

With low sweet voice, and clasped hands. 

She asked of Him, 

Who giveth all things unto prayer, 

Whose angels ever are at hand 

With good gifts from that spirit land — 

That as the sunlight, and the air. 

And fruit, and flowers, every-where. 

Were pure, and fair ; — ^her life might be. 

As fair and pure, continually. 

But mostly for her child, prayed she, 

That God would care for him alway. 

And lead him in His perfect way. 



THE MORNING WATCH. 33 

And whatsoever of alloy, 

Were mingled in her song of praise, 

Or pain, and suffering, and disease, 

And waking nights, and weary days ; 

Still would it be a song of joy, 

If a kind Father would protect her boy. 

But thou art merciful, she said, and wise, 

Oh guide thou all his destinies ! 

Not this world's fame I ask for him. 

Or power, or place, or length of days ; 

But give him strength, pure thoughts, and 

praise. 

And make his great heart in all things 

Constant in giving, — as a fountain flings 

Sweet waters momently. 

But if the time shall be, 

When he no more will hearken unto Thee ; 

Follow no more thy counsels ; and astray, 

His feet go down that way, 
2* 



34 THE MORNING WATCH. 

Which leadeth unto darkness and the grave ; 

And there be none to save ; 

And then amid the shoutings and the strife, 

And rushing of the wheels of life, 

Shadows, terrible and dim, 

Fold round him, till he see no more 

The beacon on the far-off shore, — 

Fold round him, and no angel stay 

His quick step down that starless way. 

Oh, Father ! let me die for him ! — 

Let him not die ! — but in that day. 

Oh, let me die for him ! 

Thus daily on the marbled beach, 
The morning and the evening each, 
Were hallowed ; and every day 
The two fair angels seemed to say, 
That strength was in that prayer, which 
would not pass away. 



THE MORNING WATCH. 35 

And often when the cooling east 

Grew dark with shadows, and the grey 

Of twilight melted into night, 

Hushing the noises of the day ; 

While the great voice of the cataract rang, 

Deeper and louder, among the hills : 

This song she sang — 
An ancient legend handed on 
From a distant generation. 
Of a bright country — a far away country — 
A beautiful country, over the sea ! 

Have I told you of that happy land, 

Far over the hills away — 
Far over the seas and mountains. 

Where they say it is always day ? 

Never the night shuts in that country, 
Or cometh the gloaming grey ; 



36 THE MORNING WATCH, 

But the day shines on for ever. 
In that coimtry far away. 

All the golden hours of morning, 
Chiming ever the same sweet lay. 

Singing of morning, morning only, 
In that country far away. 

Oh my life is full of joy, 
As my heart is full alway ; 

But often still I'm thinking 
Of that country far away. 

The night is very beautiful, 
But more beautiful the day ; 

Oh ! I think that God must live there. 
In that country far away. 

Is there sorrow in that land ? 
Are there weary hearts, I pray ? 



THE MORNING WATCH. 37 

Do they seek for death, I ask you, 
In that country far away ? 

There is no sorrow in that land, 

And all weary hearts they say. 
Shall find rest, and joy, and peace. 

In that country far away. 

But unto him came other messengers. 

And other voices, now, than her's, 

And other white arms gleaming 'neath the 

firs. 
And unto him came sweet tones low, 
And hushed as with a weight of wo. 
Which they would hide — that weight of wo, 
And made a music in his ears. 
Which rang through all the coming years. 
And they who sang, with faces veil'd 
(Half-veil'd faces, that were paled 



38 THE MORNING WATCH. 

And wan, with all that weight of wo), 

Came gently to him in his dreams, — 

Came sitting by the mountain streams, — 

Came suddenly (as might arise 

A vision from a world below). 

With clasping hands and meaning eyes, 

With strange light beaming, as from skies, 

Whose angels are not God's — whose day 

And night have been for ever 

Dashed together ; 

And dashed together, mingle never, 

But ever each the other sunders, 

And white lightnings, and quick thunders. 

Fight the wintry weather ! 

Thus they gazed upon him, waking 
From a vision of their making ; 
And about him and around him 
Twining, with their white arms bound him, 



THE MORNING WATCH. 39 

And about him and around him, 

With white orange-blossoms crowned him, 

And Uke children, hand in hand, 

Eastward o'er the fading strand, 

They led him from his father's land. 

But ere he reached the utmost range — 
The border range of that countree, 
Sloping downward to the sea. 
He turned for one last look, before 
He passed for ever from that shore, 
A land which he might see no more ! 
The two bright angels in the west, 
They had gone up to their rest ; 
Their sweet faces were not there, 
And darkness gathered in the air ! 

But in their stead, 

The white light of a single star, 



40 THE MORNING WATCH. 

(Small and dimly burnished, 

In the mid-heaven buried far) 

Came down through the quivering deep. 

And wander'd as in sleep ! 

As to a house of death, 
The Night came softly ! scarce a breath 
Was on the waters, — and so clear. 
And still, the cloud-hung atmosphere. 
The soft voice, and the under-tone 
Of the small sea, and Ocean's moan, 
Were music separate, and alone! 
But he who look'd upon that scene. 
Saw not the buried star in Heaven ; 
Saw not the wild flowers on the green ; 
Heard not the music given ; 
But long he gazed, and fixedly. 
Where in the distance seem'd to be, 
A figure clad in robes of white, 



THE MORNING WATCH. 41 

Upon the margin of the sea. 

A figure clad in robes of white 

(Looking as an Angel might), 

Who folding close each marble hand, 

Knelt lowly on the glistening sand, 

And with still pale lips rais'd to Heaven, 

Look'd up, as to a brighter land ! 

Long and fixedly, he gazed 
Down upon that face uprais'd ; 
Then turning suddenly, — as one 
Who chooses madness, — as a stone, 
For one who is an-hunger'd — lone, 
(Oh all alone, for God went not) 
With only in his Heaven, the light 
Of that one star, so pale and deep, — 
His quick steps, wandering as in sleep, 
Lost! Lost! he fled within the Nisht! 



III. 



Into that world wherein the quick and dead 

Meet daily, but no word is said ; 

No greeting, no warm shaking of the hands, 

No orders, no commands ; 

For look you, what is this man now ? 

What good is he ? The chili is on his brow, 

And all his heart is still. 

Hath he not lived his day ? — 

Take him away ! 

Into that world, which whoso entereth 
Receives upon his brow the mark of death ; 
But liveth for a space, and dies not utterly ; 
Where only of its own are strife, 
And all the bitterness of life. 



THE MORNING WATCH. 43 

And mocking hopes and sundered friends 

(For all that's good God sends), 

That world where faith, and truth, 

And falsehood, fight for ever, fled the youth. 

Not as the dead he entered there, 
Shut down beneath the coffin's lid, 
And wrapt about in his last shroud ; 
No train of mourners followed, 
Or funeral pomp, or wailings loud. 
This world-bound traveller ; 
No solemn prayers were said : 
He was not dead. 

Oh, not as the dead he entered there ! 
Rather like one who everywhere 
Stands as a land-mark on the earth ; 
One of great deeds or noble birth, 
Or one who hath broad lands. 



44 THE MORNING WATCH. 

And giveth orders and commands ; 
For open arms and grasping hands 
Met and received him there. 

Many and swift the years have sped 
Since that bright morning when they met, 
And down the gUttering pathway led 
The wanderer from his home. 
Oh, fair-haired traveller ! well do I 
Remember thee and thy bright look. 
Child of the mountain-valley, 
Mate of the mountain-brook, 
For thou and I were one that day. 
But now the silver and the grey 
Of the swift-rounding years, doth lay 
Upon a pale, cold brow : 
There is no likeness now. 

We had come down from a high land ; 



THE MORNING WATCH. 45 

(Thou, boy, and I) from a mountain land. 

Where faith, and hope, and charity, 

Walked daily with us hand-in-hand. 

In the hope of immortality. 

From thence all downward was the path, 

Hanging the mountain's brow around. 

And winding as a stair. 

Which some huge shaft 

Goes darkling down, . 

To the broad lands of one who hath 

The power and the dominion there. 

A dim and shadowy land ! 

A sad and sorrowing land ! 

For vice and fear, remorse and wrath. 

Are the companions there. 

Oh ! let me not stain my lips to tell 

The secrets of that hell. 

God knoweth that the heavens are fair, 



46 THE MORNING WATCH. 

And all the round world beautiful ; 
But man without His Spirit, where, 
Oh Heaven, is the home for him ? 

Tell me not now of golden skies, 

And gardens fair as Paradise ; 

And hope, and man's high destinies. 

This tell me not, for now I see 

Beneath a bright and azure sky 

In a land that might be Paradise — 

A vast and mighty host arise. 

Where ranks of armed men amid, 

The brazen mouths of war are hid, 

And crest, and helm, and tossing plume. 

Their quick flash dimly doth illume. 

And the met armies of the world 

(Bodies and souls of mortal men) 

Mingle, and curse, and die ! Not yet hath curl'd 

The smoke above that place of battle ; 



THE MORNING WATCH, 47 

But I see 

(Oh God, too well) 
Famine, and Plague, and Misery ! 
And other fiends, which scarcely Hell 
Will welcome to their place again. 
I hear the struggle, and the rattle 
Of man's last agony : 
And see the clench'd hand grasping there 
Hate, and terror, and despair ! 

Ah ! dost thou not hear 
A shriek leap through the atmosphere, 
A million voices as in one ? 
Dost thou not hear it out upon 
The broad old Heavens, uprising from 
A land in bondage, where they cry, 
" Help, save us or we die !" 
Again, again, that long, wild cry, 
" Help, save us or we die." 



48 THE MORNING WATCH. 

Oh Christ, who heareth prayer, 
When shall theirs be the victory, 

The many, and down-trodden ; they 
Who bear the burden of the day ? 

Oh cheer and strengthen them, alway, 
And let them not despair : 

Band them, the millions, all as one 
In the great might of unison ; 

And with them, let thy right arm fight 

The Battle of the Right ! / 

Oh Christ, who heareth prayer, 
Thou knowest how the whole earth travaileth, 
And reeleth, with the shock 
Of war, and pestilence, and death ! 
Even the Heavens seem to mock 
At us, as prayers were wasted breath : 
Thou seest the dawning on the hill ; 
When shall be done thy will, 



THE MORNING WATCH. 49 

Oh when shall morning come ? 

This is not home. 
Oh let us not despair. 

I listen — and a soft voice saith 

" Peace — peace : the harvest is not past ; 

The Summer is not ended yet. 

But now behold one cometh, 

My servant, whom I send 

That there may be one mightier 

Than hate, or vengeance, or despair ; 

The angel's name is Death. 
Oh is he not fair to see ? 
Ailing art thou, outcast, and poor ? 

He will not mock at thee, 
Nor do thee harm. 
He hath the keys 

That shall unlock for thee 

Life's mysteries. 
3 



60 THE MORNING WATCH. 

Fear not — trust thou his arm. 
Scorned of the world, 
And outcast, — thou shalt uplifted be 
And put on robes of immortality !" 

Thou world, that like old Nineveh, 

Art slowly buried, day by day : 

Whose white sands rolling, death-bells tolling, 

Tell of the same sure destiny : 

" Ok, is he not fair to see ?" 

Even while thy palace walls are gay 

With paint, as for an holiday, 

Lowly art thou buried, 

And sittest meekly with the dead ; 

And when the sands have drifted o'er 

Thy painted chambers, as before. 

Other pale and outworn faces, 

Come up, seeking for the places. 

Where they may rest and toil no more. 



■r H 15 M O 11 N I N G WATCH. 51 

So above thy palaces, 

Wherein now no malice is, 

Or trouble more, but eyelids closely press'd, 

And folded hands, and slumber, and calm rest ; 

So above thy palaces, 

Where all pomp and glory is 

(For there must be room, 

Always, for the tomb), 

Building deep, and broad, and strong. 

As for a race that will hold it long ; 

The ancient, pale-fac'd, outcast race, 

They raise their last, still, dwelling-place. 

There in marble beds they sleep. 
While above, the heavens are deep, 
And around, the white sands creep, 
And above, the warm winds sweep, 

And night-dews weep. 
Oh ! strong and mighty in that still place, 



52 THE MORNING WATCH. 

Each with his cold and ashen face, 
Is that ancient, outcast race ! 

But thou shalt arise, oh world ! one day 

As by the breath of God! then shalt thou see 

The paintings on thy palaces — 

All whose beauty and glory is 

Only in darkness and decay — 

Like mist-lines fade away ! 

Even as old Nineveh, 

In her palmiest day; 

Lived I that thrice-accursed life ; 

'Till now a feeling, as of doom, 

Hung everywhere its cloud of gloom, 

The herald of a bitter strife ; 

For of the golden years that pass'd, 

Each one less golden than the last. 

Was none brought offerings to Him 



THE MORNING WATCH. 53 

Who ruleth and ordaineth them. 

Then the pure sunhght soon became 

Cold, sickly, like a thing of shame, 

As trembling, pale, and wan it lay, 

And could not warm the day. 

Even the sweet Heavens themselves grew dim, 

And cold, and high, and thunder-riven ; 

At times, save only, when on high, 

The storm-cloud parted in the sky, 

And I saw, all pure and fair. 

The same bright, matchless glory there, 

In the blue dome of Heaven. 

But even as I look'd, the rack 

Swept down upon the glittering tracks 

And I stood again upon 

The wide world, starless, and alone. 

Not unlike one in dreams surrounded 
With strange phantoms of the dead, 



64 THE MORNING "WATCH. 

Who thanks God, waking suddenly, 

With beating heart and gasping breath, 

And prays a little time to be 

Lifted from that misery ; 

But sinks powerless again 

(For the chain about his brain 

Winding, binds its iron train), 

And sleeps, and wakes, and sleeps again, 

'Till some one brings in death; 

And death breaks in twain the chain, 

And casts loose the iron train. 

And now throbs no more the brain, 

Yet he shall not wake again. 

Too late ! too late ! too late ! 

Oh God! he will not wake again! 



IV 



One morning when the summer pass'd, 

The mellow days of autumn came, 

And over all the landscape cast 

Their pure bright glory, like a flame 

Of incense, rising everywhere 

In the golden-tinted atmosphere; 

I went forth in thfe glimmering dawn, 

Ere yet the early dews were gone, 

To the blue hills, which southerly 

Break off abruptly in the sea. 

Before me was an orchard-lawn, 

And down that lawn, with many a crook, 

Went by a babbling mountain brook ; 

And there beneath a broad-arm'd tree 

I sat, and made my holiday. 



66 THE MORNING WATCH. 

No doubt, an angel 'twas who came, 

And gave me breath, and life, and thought, 

And led me from that place of shame 

So gently, that I knew it not ; 

Likewise reminding me of all 

Sweet fancies, which beneath some thrall 

Now rose as to a festival ; 

And music brought with them, pure air, 

And evergreens, and garlands fair, 

Cool springs of water, mosses, mountain ices, 

And carved shells, and flowers with rare 

devices. 
There, sitting beneath the broad old tree, 
They danced upon the bright green sod, 
Old-fashion'd phantoms, strange and odd. 
But fresh with all the hues of youth. 
And bold-ey'd as the living truth ! 
And a brave old song they sang to me, 
All of the days when they and I 



THE MORNING WATCH. 5 

Went wandering under a summer sky, 
And chased the shadows, as they sail'd by. 
On the shore of a sun-lit sea. 

The hours roU'd on : I scarce could say 
If it were night, or it were day ; 
Old faces look'd at me, old prayers 
Were murmur'd over, unawares, 
Until from out the mountain glen 
I heard a loud voice say " Ame7i !" 
(I know not if an angel 'twas. 
Or some sweet echo wandering there 
Saying " Amen" to its own prayer. 
But sure I am that once, and again, 
A voice cried out " Amen /") 

Then I arose, and down the lawn, 

And through an ancient wood pass'd on, 

Until we reach'd the sounding sea. 
3* 



58 THE MORNING WATCH. 

(The mountain brook went down with me, 
And as it went, talk'd even on ;) 
And nowhere there was discontent. 
Or pride, or scorn, or argument ; 
But all things in that golden weather, 
Seem'd only to live and love together ! 

And sitting in that ancient wood, 
I caught the secret of it all : 
That all things beautiful, are good ; 
And all things good, are beautiful ! 

As in the beauty of a tree, 
Obedient to the will of God, 
Knowing no other will, and free 
Of all his gifts — the warm rich sod 
About its branching feet — the visiting air ; 
The travelling clouds in heaven, and its soft 
blue ; 



THE MORNING WATCH. 59 

The mist, the summer showers, the cool night 

dew ; 
The light of stars, and moonlight, and the sun, 
And the still lightnings, when the battle 's won ; 
All things soever, of the fair and good, 
It chooseth from the multitude ; 
Chooseth joyfully and mute. 
To mingle with its flower and fruit ; 
And these it giveth unto Him ; 
All which it hath. Oh ! not the Cherubim 
Give thanks more welcome, it may be. 
Than the sweet offering of this humble tree. 

And now the fairest of the day, 
Its hours most golden, had passed on. 
Over the harbor, over the bay, 
On, on, to the westward they 
Were following the dawn. 



60 THE MORKING WATCH. 

But ere the shadows from the hill 
Told of the night, its gloom and chill ; 
While the warm glory everywhere 
Still hovered in the golden air, — 
Arose a dim and shadowy train 
Of pictures, which within my brain 
Had slumbered long ; not bright and gay 
As those which trooped in with the day. 
But sad and tearful. Some were old, 
Some joyous faces now grown cold ; 
Some very sad that now are beautiful. 
And bright with light and joy. 
One was the picture of a boy 
Who had the look of an Immortal, 
For his years were few. 
Not Heaven's dew 
Was purer than that boy. 
But in a picture of a later day 



THE MORNING "WATCH, 61 

A man was there — the angel gone away ! 
(These all are they which once had life and 

breath, 
And now are dead not — they but sleep. 
Not shadows they, 
Or phantoms, which will pass away ; 
We shall awake with them, when Death 
Shall open that long gallery. 
Where in bright colors that will last 
Doth hang the pictures of the Past.) 
As each pass'd by, a sad tone rose, 
And throbbed and fluttered to its close ; 
Old-song fragments, and tones low 
And rich with echoes of the long ago i 

Like the soft haze, that everywhere 
Brooded over the summer air, 
I saw one sweet-toned picture there. 
Mellowing all thought, stilling all care ; 



62 THE MORNING WATCH. 

It was " the hush of prayer.'^ 

I gazed upon it till the sun had set ; 

I gazed upon it till my eyes were wet, 

And my heart throbbed and my reeling brain 

Came down in blinding rain. 

Then I arose and looked upon the heavens, 

And looked upon my life ; 

And looked upon the object of that life ; 

And looked upon the hour when life 

should cease ; 

And one was bright with beauty and with light, 

And one was calm, and grateful, and at peace ; 

But this was darkened with a coming Night, 

Of fear, and bitterness, and strife, 

And fear, and bitterness, and death ; 
Poisoning the world which first had poisoned it, 
And made it but a puff of tainted breath ! 



THE MORNING WATCH. 63 

I came to my deserted home, 
And sitting by the open door, 
Beneath the ehu-tree and the pahn, 
I saw the dead leaves rustUng o'er 
The pathway and the cottage floor ; 
And shadows down the mountain come 
And play upon the grassy shore. 
And launch upon the belted sea ; 
I saw the mountain-summits, calm 
And mighty, as in days of yore ; 
And heard wild voices, fitfully. 
Sweet wild voices, which the breeze 
Uplifted from the distant seas ; 
But one sweet voice, on sea, on shore, 
I heard not, and shall hear no more ! 

Then a sad vision came to me ; 
All in the still and shadowy night, 
A figure clad in robes of white 



64 THE MORNING WATCH. 

Stood on the margin of the sea : 
A figure clad in robes of white, 
And looking as an Angel might, 
Who folding close each marble hand, 
Knelt lowly on the glistening sand ; 
And with still, pale lips rais'd to Heaven, 
Look'd up as to a brighter land ! 

And from that night there was no peace for me, 
In this my home ; no peace or rest. 
But a great sadness, deep, unspeakable. 
Folded itself about me like a mist ; 
Enshrouding all things, and bedimming all ; 
So that all glory of the hills, the sun. 
And light of breaking waters, was no more ; 
And in their stead, dim shapes, and mocking 

eyes. 
Went on before me by the sounding shore, 
And look'd upon me from the vaulted skies : 



THE M O U N I N G WATCH. 65 

And weird, and dream-like, as in some strange 

clime. 
Amid the darkening hom's, the lagging time 
RoU'd onward, like a sullen summer's day. 
With the low thunder muttering in the sky. 
The flashes of its anger momently 
Revealing far-off shores of gloom ; and over 

all, the light 
Making a solemn mockery of Night ! 
So lying by the sea-side, worn and wan, I slept, 
And dream'd ; and while the rattling sands 

crept 
Up, and the low song of waters rose and fell, 
Like thunder-tones made musical ; 
My spirit was afar, and pois'd above the deep, 
Where all the bright worlds, quiet as in sleep, 
RoU'd by in glory, — and from each and all 
In a new language, strange, and wonderful, 
A sweet low sound 



GG THE MORNING WATCH. 

As of a festival, or worship, floated round 

And was perpetual. 
But as I look'd, lo ! suddenly, 
Within the sun-illumin'd space, star-strewn, 
Monstrous, and formless, as though thrown 
From Chaos, and the Everlasting Night — 
Which gave not, or receiv'd, but backward 

hurl'd 
Upon the skies, the music and the light. 
Which elsewhere were a wonder and delight ; 
Its pennants idle, and its sails all furl'd. 
Silent, amid rejoicings, sail'd a silent world ! 

Its light, if such it was, was as the light 
Of breaking waters on a midnight sea ; 
Where ever storm, and darkness, and affright, 
Mingle perpetually. 

Its sky, low-hung, and starless, such as Night 



THE MORNING WATCH. 67 

And coming tempest flash upon the sight ; 
A darkness beaded, as the sea with foam, 

Where slept the lightnings of the wrath to 
come ! 

Upon this silent world there silent stood 

A vast and countless multitude ; 

With downward eyes, and lips of bloodless 

white ; 
And speechless all, — no word of hate, or love^ 
Or fear, or agony, — no sigh, or moan. 
But as from some ponderous bell, sky-hung. 
Unseen within the vault above, — 
In pauses from its iron tongue, 
Fell through the gloom (as 'twere a groan 
From all that host) one deep, sad tone, 
A single toll ; at which all eyes were rais'd. 
And lips apart, each look'd a kind of joy. 
Something like madness, — but soon again, 



68 THE MORNING WATCH. 

As a quick lightning to the brain, 
Upon their downward faces, fell 
The look of woe unutterable ! 

A mother and her child met there — 

Both were so beautiful and fair. 

That, so it seem'd, a milder mood 

Pervaded that vast multitude ; 

But the mother gazed at her speechless child. 

And the child look'd up at her silent mother. 

One with a look so wan and wild. 

And with so blank despair, the other ; 

And pray'd (Oh God, forgive their sin) 

That Jesus Christ might die again, 

Or some quick madness set them free 

From such unnatural misery. 

But still they gazed, the child and mother. 

And still with look more terrible ; 

Till, suddenly, each spurn'd the other. 



THE MORNING WATCH. 09 

And then for ever on them fell 
(Oh, type and counter-sign of Hell) 
That look of woe unutterable ! 



V. 



The vision chang'd ; the multitude were gone, 
And that sad group : and darkness clos'd 

around. 
Then slowly, as at coming of the dawn, 
A light came soft and quietly, 
And I was looking at an evening sky. 
Bright stars were there — some travelling 

clouds sail'd by, 
Seeking a mountain range, not far, 
Which inland stood. Alow and tremulous jar, 
With sounds of falling waters, sounded near. 
And o'er a lowland vale a light mist curl'd. 
And slept, and here and there 
Rock'd gently in the evening air. 
I was again within the sounding world ! 



THE MORNING WATCH. 7l 

And looking at these pictures in the air, 
Upon the back-ground of the rounded sky, 
I knew it was the same old world which I 
Had left at sunset, drowsing on the sands ; 
And knew that it was pure and fair as ever ; 
But from that dream I woke not utterly ; 

Woke not, but saw again 
The look, the multitude, the clasped hands. 

The wordless agony! 
I know not if the print is on the brain. 
But they were with me, and will be for ever. 
Waking, I woke not, but for years 
Went up and down the land as one 
Who, having pass'd all human fears, 
Moves on as in a world alone, 
Where there is neither joy nor tears. 
And so alike, through forests and the throng 
Of crowded cities, and among 
All sights and sounds, voiceless and swift 



^■2 THE MORNINO WATCH. 

And with a light step, as on air, 
I pass'd on like a bark adrift 
Upon a shoreless sea : but where 
The mountains, as in prayer, 
Lift up their heads, and seem to say- 
Low hallelujahs to the air ; 
And where the sea,its hosts march'd up the bay. 
Shouts all as one, "wonder and praise !" 
There wander'd most, and through the sum- 
mer days 
Sat motionless, hearing but one voice ; 
And bearing, ever, through all place, all time, 
The burden of a nameless crime. 
And of my own there came nor fear, nor joy ; 
The wild beasts look'^d at me, but harm'd me 

not, — 
Only a beautiful Chamois 
Stole up, and timidly, in its sad, wild 
Way, gazed within my eyes, as a child 



THE MORNING WATCH. 73 

Looks upon a new face at the hearth : 
And I and the Chamois were friends at sight. 

I had no thought of prayer. 

I dared not : but to be, 

As by the mountains, and the sea, 

And by the lonely cataract, within 

An atmosphere of peace, and love, 

And, as it were, a kind of supplication ; 

Pure voices, that acceptably above. 

Go up, for ever and for ever ; — this to me, 

Was as my daily food, my breath, my life, 

and free 
As was the manna in the wilderness ; and 

as one. 
Within some lofty nave alone. 
Breathes in the music of the choir. 
And with a still heart, witnesses 
The Holy Mysteries ; 



74 THE MORNING WATCH. 

But dares not raise 

His voice, or utter one " Amen," 

Or in the " Gloria" swell the hymn of praise ; 

But kneeling far apart, 

All mute, and lone. 

Hears only one deep tone ; 

The music of a prayer unutter'd, at his heart, — 

Thought, but not daring speech, 

" Christ have mercy upon us," — 

So, by the lone cataract, and upon the hill, 

And by the mountains, and the sea, 

I heard the everlasting worship, and was still ! 

At last there came a change : methought 

that all 
The sweet low voices musical. 
From falling waters, and the evening breeze 
Bound sea- ward o'er the forest trees. 
And from the mountain-passes, and the sea. 



THE MORNING WATCH, 75 

For ever and for ever, rose for me ! 

For ever through the still and starry night ; 

For ever in the sun, and in the light 

Of storm, and tempest, and in rocking winds', 

Like Angels flying o'er 

A land accurs'd, and evermore 

Beseeching Heaven, " Spare, oh spare :" 

So rose the universal prayer ; 

Forever and forever rose for me ! 

And then I wept ; and fell upon the sands, 
And rose all nerveless, and with clapping hands 
Ran plunging in the breakers ; and from out 
The lifting waves, essayed to shout, 
And join the everlasting voice 
Which now a new song sang, " rejoice. 
Rejoice, oh evermore rejoice!" 



76 THE MORNING WATCH. 

Then up the high rocks springing, swift with 

joy. 

I shouted down my beautiful Chamois. 
And all that summer day, upon the hill, 
We listen'd the new music and were still ! 

But as the light waned, and the evening crept 
Above the mountains, drawing close apart 
My new-born happiness, — as to the heart, 
The hand of one we love, — I slept ; 
Going adown the deeps, as down deep 
Waters goes the diver, slower and more slow, 
And finding far below, 
The equilibrium of a happy sleep. 

Waking, 'twas midnight — far beneath me lay 
The sleeping waters of the bay : 
But from the ocean, as from some emotion. 
Never-dying, never-ceasing, with its motion. 




\ 



THE MORNING WATCH. 11 

Momently, like the ticking of a clock, 
Came up the quick, low shock 
Of breakers on the beach, and moonlit sands 
Forever beckoning to the beckoning sky. 
Ran gleaming right and left, as into unknown 

lands. 
Then looking upward, with a moisten'd eye, 
I said, " Oh wonderful, and glorious, and Most 

High, 
Unto thy name be praise, and adoration. 
Glory, and power, and wonder, and all might. 
And the first fruits of all pure hearts for ever, 
For this great mystery, that thou art Love." 

And while the round world, cool within the 

night. 
And murmuring ever as of pleasant dreams. 
Went down to meet the morning — I to my 

cottage home, 



78 THE MORNING WATCH. 

Went slowly down the dewy mountain side, 
And said unto my soul, " Oh woe betide 
The ill that henceforth may o'ershadow thee. 
Thou soul immortal ! A few days yet we roam, 
And ever travelling in the self-same round, 
And ever seeking what shall not be found. 
And ever hasting with the farthest star, 
Silently, swiftly, to the judgment-bar ! 
Oh soul immortal, let us sin no more ! 
Oh soul immortal, let us no more fear ! 
But listening to the surges on the shore. 
Attune us to the music that is here ; 
Even the echo of the life to come ! 
And so, when call'd of God, 
We step without these walls of flesh and blood. 
It will be going to our natural home ; 
Not lost, benighted, in a land of storms. 
Begirt and heralded with phantom forms ; 
But light-surrounded, hail with songs of praise, 



THK MOKNINU WATCH. 79 

The sunny climate of our early days ; 
And find again, more beautiful and fair, 
The hopes and visions that have linger'd there. 
Oh, hopes gone up : oh, memories laid away : 
Unto that day, 
Keep bright your robes of immortality ! 

Then glorified with crimson and with gold, 
The ever glad and bounding world rolled 
Down the sunrise, that on radiant seas, 
Far orient, had flash'd the livelong night. 
Where AflTghanistan, and the Siamese, 
And stranger hulks from famous Astracand, 
With barks European, their brows abreast. 
Went gaily sunward to a glittering land ; 
But with them all sail'd neither peace or rest, 
Or any forethought of the night to come ; 
But rather, as all night had pass'd away, 
And time itself unrolled in one long golden day. 



80 THE MORNING WATCH, 

And even thus, I said unto my soul, 
Oh soul immortal, we will sin no more I 

Oh morning, golden with the light of love. 
When I was lifted, as with angel wings. 
When wilt thou dawn again, oh fair to see ? 
For now a soft voice cometh from above. 

And sings, 

As 'twere a prophecy, 
Of other mornings soon again to be. 
In a far country, by a sapphire sea. 
Oh, home among the mountains beautiful, 
Shall I not look upon thy face once more ? 
Perchance the measure of my days is full. 
And I must onward to that distant shore; 
Oh, let me look upon thee once again, ere yet 
The long night cometh, when my sun must set. 
Hast thou grown old, my home, my beautiful ? 
Are not the mountains round thee as of yore ? 



THE MORNING WATCH. 81 

Comes not the morning glorious, as then, 

Flushing the valley and the mountain glen ? 

Behold, I come ! 

I stand between the highlands and the sea, 

Where facing seaward, underneath the hills. 

Thou look'st upon the heavens lovingly, 

As I look on thee, my home ! 

I see the mountains with thee as of old, 

I hear the fountain-music from the hills ; 

And all the valley the swift sunlight fills 

Brimming and golden ! 

But as I look, the light grows pale and cold, 

The vision changes, and the years roll on. 

The vision changes ; — the soft day hath gone, 

And over the valley and the hill, 

The drowsing air is still. 

Only a light, low breath there seems to be, 

Which is the land-wind going out to sea. •■ 
4* 



82. THE MORNING WATCH. 

There were two angels in the west, 
But they have gone up to their rest ; 
Their sweet faces are not there. 
And darkness gathers in the air. 

But now the stars wheel up the heavens, 
Where midway the moon hath gone ; 

And a pilot-cloud from inland, 
Seaward leads his comrades on. 

On, on, how swift, yet lightly, 

While faint-droppeth in the breeze 

Sounds, whose murmurs, only nightly. 
Mingle with the drowsing seas. 

These are they which from the hill-sides 
Come down mingling in the air, 

And are one, yet many, like as 
Rare and mingled perfumes are. 



THE MORNING WATCH. 83 

But now the mid-watch cometh quickly, 

And the night careering on, 
Pauses midway in its journey, 

To God-speed the day that's gone. 

And the High Archangel writes it, 
In that Book before the Throne, 

Where is written all the evil, 
All the good that we have done. 

When all prayer is inspiration, 

And all thought is prayer : 
And amid the wide creation, 

God seems only there. 

When the world goes round so slowly, 
And the stars come down so near, 

Pure witnesses and holy, 
Of my agony and fear. 



84 THE MORNING WATCH. 

And I turn me from their brightness. 
To my lone and darkened room. 

Where my sins crowd in before me. 
Adding terror to its gloom. 

Then when slumber God denies me. 
And the Christ who for us died, 

These my olden mates stand round me. 
By my desolate bed-side. 

Then with mocks, and smiles, and dances. 

Comes the carnival of sin ; 
Then my rooms are fiU'd with music ; 

Then the services begin ! 

While the world goes round so slowly. 
And the stars come down so near ; 

Witnesses so pure and holy. 
Of my agony, and fear. 



THE MOKNING WATCH. 85 

I have barr'd out the beautiful stars ; 

But I know that they are there, 
Glittering, — all the tens of thousands, 

In the keen, still air. 

They shall not see my old companions; 

Not one of the stars shall see ; 
Not one — not one — think you they know 

How dear they have been to me ? 

How they were all my life, my joy. 

In the days of long ago ! 
They shall not see their now pale faces ; 

Their cold, cold lips, their looks of woe ! 

Oh beautiful night, roll on, roll on, 

Oh bright stars, onward roll ! 
But I must stay with this company. 

And the spell that is on my soul ! 



86 THE MORNING WATCH. 

How am I girded about with friends ! 

Look ! the smile, the glance, the glow ! 
Oh this is kindness all, my comrades ? 

The ancient kindness ; — is it not so ? 

Beautiful night — roll on, roll on, 
Oh bright stars, onward roll ! 

But I must stay with my company, 
And the spell that is on my soul ! 

So the beautiful night rolls on, in horror, 

Seeming palsied on its way ; 
Till the first white light of morning 

Heralds the approaching day. 

Then the dead years, rolling backward. 
Leave me at that threshold, where 

She who was its joy, departed, 
And again return'd not there. 



THE MORNING WATCH, 87 

Not again, though soon the coming 

Of the Spring, bade all rejoice, 
Not again, though all the summer, 

Came the birds that lov'd her voice. 

Oh the many prayers in secret, 

Earnest, low-voic'd, sobbing prayer. 

When she knew not that I listen'd, 
As an Angel held me there ! 

Listen'd, but with rebel spirit, 
And a heart unyielding, strove, 

As a demon with an Angel, 

With those words of peace and love. 

Oh my mother ! Oh my childhood ! 

Oh the days that are no more ! 
And the years, they bear me onward 

Farther, farther from that shore. 



B8 THE MORNING WATCH. 

And still farther from that other, 
In the land where I would be : 

Far beyond the purple mountains, 
And beyond the gleaming sea ! 

Where night comes no more for ever. 

And a glory is on high, 
Not of the moon, nor of the stars, 

Nor the sunlight in the sky. 

Oh thou Christ, who art that glory, 
Check the rolling wheels, that I 

May hear once more of pardon. 
And of peace, before I die. 

Hush ! I hear a music coming, 

As of voices in the air ; 
Ah ! the flashing, snow-white garments, 

And the floating, raven hair ! 



THE MORNING WATCH. 89 

Lo ! the spirit-watchers leave me ; 

And a Presence, pure and fair. 
With a motion, calm, majestic 

As an Angel's, enters there. 

With the same calm face and lovely, 
That bent o'er me when a child ; 

Oh the look she casts upon me. 
So terrible ! so mild ! 

Oh ! my mother ! Oh my childhood ! 

Oh the days that are no more ! 
Oh for wings to bear me with thee. 

Onward to that happy shore. 

With a finger pointing upward. 

And a sweet sad smile upon 
Her angel face, that whispers peace ; 

The bright vision passes on ! 



90 THE MORNING WATCH. 

But I know that angels guard me ; 

As a child, I sink to rest : 
I will dream of the still waters, 

And a home among the blest! 

A bright home, apart from others, 
Where with those I love, and those 

Who have journey'd on before me, 
I may worship and repose ! 



END OF PART FIRST. 



SiitBrluh. 



KntevhilJe. 

The light is the light of a star or two, 
And a thin old moon, which fain would do 
What little she can, as hanging low 
In the western sky, she moves on slow, 
And the night is still. The sky is bare, 
Save the little white cloud which tarrieth 

there, 
Sailing no more. And now more rare, 
And pure, and heavenly, seemeth the cloud, 
As folding itself in its own white shroud ; 
Ah ! no doubt, when cometh the day. 
The little white cloud will go up and away ! 

Spirit, whatsoever of ill. 

Hast thou seen upon the mountains. 



94 THE MORNING WATCH. 

Darkening the silver fountains, 
Without advent, without warning, 
The long night that hath no morning, 
As a sleep that hath no waking, 
Wrapt in dreams of hush'd affright ? 
Lo ! a home for thee is making 
In that everlasting night ! 
Thou wilt find companions there, 
Away — away — come not here. 



^Hx\ tjiB InnnL 



i9art tf)c ^ccoJTlJ 
I. 

I TOLD you of the belted sea 

That laps the bases of the hills, 

Save in one point, where southerly. 

These hills are parted, and a way 

Lies open to the outer bay. 

An old man on the northern main, 

Who deep in the mountains lived, was wont 

To come down to the lowland plain, 

And sitting by the cottage door. 

While down the sky, 

Mellow and red, the day was slanting, 

The old man would his life recount : 

Telling the old times o'er 

Cheerily, as one chanting 

A song which he hath sung before, 



98 THE MORNING WATCH. 

In better days gone by : 

Travels and gossip of those better days, 

In fabulous and far-ojfF countries. 

Blended and softened in the haze 

Of distance, and the long, long years 

Gone on, never to come again. 

A strange old man was he, all smiles and tears, 

With, as I think, some madness in his brain, 

For his tales were all. 

As I have said, wild, fantastic, wonderful. 

But now I heard the old man tell 

Of a strange country, far away 

In the path of the sunset, where, said he. 

There is no night, on land or sea ! 

No night, I said, on land or sea ? 

Rising, and pointing where the sun 
Had gone on down the horizon ; 



THE MORNING WATCH. 99 

His white hair flowing ; his countenance 
Lit up as with a prophet's glance ; 

No night, said he, on land or sea ! 

No night upon the gleaming land ! 

No night upon the sapphire sea ! — 

But continually the Day ! 

The great sea rocketh gently on the strand, 
And the wind comes southerly. 

Ships in neighboring seas, 

Bear up that way 
To make their northings; counting on the 

breeze. 
Southerly always ; and the new life there 

In that wondrous atmosphere. 

Mountains all around it stand, 
Guardians of the land ; 



100 THE MORNING WATCH. 

But the sea, 
The sea alone, 
Is mistress of her own — 
Knoweth no mastery ! 
And the sea and the land, and the land and 
the sea. 
Are all one country. 

Angels are there ! 
God's angels doubtless, 

For they are fair, 

And beautiful', no less ; 

Undoubtedly, 

God hath made this colony 

From some world of Immortals, 

Perchance the Heavens themselves : 

For no man liveth who doth understand 

The language of that land ! 



THE MORNING WATCH. 101 

As in soft mornings in high latitudes, 
When last night's snow hangs lightly on the 

trees, 
And all the cedars and the pines are white 
With the new glory; and each passing breeze 
Sends it drifting through the air. 
As fine gold, beautiful and bright ; 
So in that country, in deep solitudes, 
Where is no voice breaking the stillness there. 
O'er the soft landscape falls and drifts the light ! 

There is no sun in all the round blue sky ; 
But crimson and white clouds, floating not high, 

Drop everywhere 
The drifting, golden light, down through the 

air ; 
With sometimes on the mountains summer 

showers. 
Printed with rainbows ; and at all hours. 



•102 THE MORNING WATCH. 

(For always it is morning in that land) 
Even as a friend that clingeth unto death, 

All things this light visiteth. 
Such is the beautiful country 
Where is no night, on land or sea ! 

Thus the old man said, 
And suddenly departed. 
While I stood rapt and bewilder 'd 
With this wondrous vision. 
Till looking up, I saw that he was gone. 
And half-way up the mountains, among the 
rocks, 
I saw his white locks 
Gleaming, as he stood gazing there, 
Down through the shadowy air ; 
A moment only, and was lost to sight. 
In the long shadows striding up the height. 



THE MORNING WATCH. 103 

Then all that long, warm summer night, 
I sat beneath the stars, as they went by, 
Thinking of that fair country ; 
And of the life that yet remained to me ; 
The stars that might yet rise within my sky; 
And of the crowding shadows of the past ; 

Whereof, amid the multitude, 

If aught was fair or good, 
Seemed it even as a star to beckon me 

With its small white hand, 
On, on, on, to that bright land ! 
Oh then came, filling my eyes with tears, 
The memory of that sweet old song, 
I heard so oft in the long-gone years, 
Before the evil days ; or ever 

That sweet voice was hush'd for ever : 
The song that told of this same bright country. 
The far away country. 
The beautiful country over the sea. 



104 THE MORNING WATCH. 

Doubtless, I said, must be such land, for what 
Are dreams and visions all, but prophecies ? 
Oh, happier countries are, and softer skies. 
Or why is it we dream, if they are not ? 
Now, therefore, I will journey for that land, 
Through all the years that may remain to me. 
Or few, or many, the wide world over I 

Will look for that bright sky. 

That peaceful strand, 

The beautiful country, 
Where is no night, on land or sea. 
Nor longer I will tarry ; but to-morrow. 

If that to-morrow come, 
I will go forth from this my home, 
Which now is home no longer unto me ; 

Leaving all care, all sorrow ! 
For whatsoever care shall come to me, 
And whatsoever sorrow, with wet eyes 

Look up beseechingly ; 



THE MORNING WATCH. 105 

I will not look at them, nor see them more. 
For thenceforth shall I not looking be 

Ever to that bright shore — 

To the pure skies, 
Where is no night, on land or sea ! 

Thus said I, and a star which long had hung 

Motionless, while the rest sailed on, 

Like a white line of summer lightning 

Ran glittering down the sky. 

And stopping suddenly, 

Pointed on westward ; where, 

In the soft blue air. 

Low down between two mountain peaks. 

Every day the sun sets. 

And I thought, ' It is another hand. 

Which showeth me. 

Where is the beautiful country ; 

Where is the happier land !' 
5* 



106 THE MORNING WATCH. 

And now behold the morning, 
As never before was morning ! 

As never before was Night, 
Cometh the beautiful light ! 

And the crimson morn goes up, and on. 
Into the azure of the sky, 
Where in the stillness of the dawn, 
Westerly a cloud sails by ; 
And from the dawn it taketh away 
Crimson, and white, and apple-grey. 
Silently, as sails the cloud. 

The night-dews rise in wreaths of mist ; 
The cataract of the mountain, loud 
Calls to the hills : — its bright robe gleams 

Silver, and gold, and amethyst ; 
And what like muffled thunder seems 

Is the low crumbling crush and roar, 
Of breakers on the distant shore. 



THE MORNING WATCH. 107 

The air is still ; — even as a bell, 
All sweet sounds it carrieth well ; 

But now, as a bell, they seem to say, 
All voices near, or far away, 

From the distant hills, and mountains grey, 
Or the uttermost parts of the rounding sea — 

" May God have mercy upon this day !" 

Wondering, I looked at the sweet Heaven, 
That such a prayer must needs be given, 
So bright, I said, and pure, and holy 
(If aught that's earthly can be holy) 

Doth seem this golden day ! 
But straightway came the bitter thought. 
That 'twas my sin, the prayer had wrought ; 
The burden of my sin, which lay 
Even as a curse upon the day ; 
A subtle poison, running through 
The white mist, and the morning dew. 



108 THE MORNING WATCH. 

And like the dust in sunbeams, marring all 

That else was pure and beautiful. 
Doubtless, I said, the while I breathe the air, 

Is need of that strange prayer. 
But oh my Father, for this day, I pray thee. 

Crush me not utterly ! 
Oh well I know that I must bear 

This burden, all this weary weight ; 
The life which once hath been ; 
The ill, the sorrow, and the sin. 
Which cannot yet be separate. 
Until Thou call me hence. — 
But now, I go a weary way, 
To a far land — seeking a country where 
I may yet find some respite from this care. 
And this my mountain valley, and the plain. 
My childhood's home, I ne'er shall see again ! 

Oh let me not be a mockery, 
To these brute things that know not Thee ; 



THE MORNING WATCH. 109 

But for this day, 
Take Thou my sin away ! 

Then I arose, and straightway, lo ! 
The winding valley and the sea, 
And the white mist that curled below. 

Were crowned with glory, 
As from God's right hand ! And I knew 
(For how else were the heavens so blue ? 
The cottage and the landscape all 

So radiantly beautiful ?) — 
I knew it was a sign of peace for me. 
That I was heard ; — and for my prayer 

G od had left his blessing there ! 
So, likewise, all those voices musical 

Now seemed to say, — 
" God's blessing rest upon this day !" 

Then I departed, going westerly ; 



110 THE MORNING WATCH. 

And down upon the bending horizon, 

That runs along an upland range, which high 

O'erlooks the country : 
I said unto that land my last Good Bye. 

Poised overhead, and still as a star. 
Was the crimson cloud which had sailed 
that far ; 
Unto that, also, I said Good Bye. 
Then all in the stillness of the dawn, 
The beautiful morning and I passed on ! 



II. 



The air was still ; — not a cloud on high 
Save this, the one bright cloud, which there 
Seemed motionless upon the sky, 
Resting so calm and quietly 
In the soft warm air. 
So all in the stillness of the dawn, 
The beautiful morning and I passed on ; 
Down the valley and through the wood, 
Passed on into the solitude. 

The sounds of home, the voices which said, 

" God's blessing rest upon this day," 

Slowly they were dying away, 

Oh, how sadly, dying away. 

And never yet have I heard the same 



112 THE MORIS' IN G WATCH. 

Sweet voices, which that morning came 
From my mountain-home ; and never yet 
The same bright sky and air have met, 
Though oftentimes, in my weariness, 
In desert places by the sea, 
And far away in the wilderness, 
Voices sweet have visited me; 
Voices, whose cheering were as wings 
Unto my lonely wanderings. 

I tarried not, but straightway on, 
Down the valley and through the wood, 
Passed into that ancient solitude ; 
Till up in the mountain-pass I stood, 
Where, to the country lying below. 
Between these mountains, white with snow. 
Is the crimson track of the sun-set. 

And now it was high meridian. 



THE MOUNING WATCH. 113 

And overhead stood the sun. 
Down in that country lying below, 
Was all that was lovely to look upon ; 
There saw I, pictured, as in a dream, 
The bending curve of the distant hills ; 
The lowland valley within ; and the gleam 

Of the sunlight on the sea ! 
But the little cloud which so quietly 
Stood over the hill where I said Good Bye, — 
Behold ! as quietly now it stood 

Up in this mountain-solitude, 
And in the same spot in the sky ! 
The bright colors it took from the dawn, 
The apple-grey, and the crimson, were gone ; 
And now it was dazzling white ; and radiant 
As the face of a saint ! 
(I know not if a cloud it Avere, 
Or the vision of a cloud in air, 
Seeming only to be there ; 



114 THE MORNING WATCH. 

Or, hid in the shroud of the Uttle white cloud, 
Might be those angels two, the same 
Who first at morn and evening came, 
Only at morn and evening came 
But now by day and by night must stay. 
Because of the perils of the way !) 

How it came up, no one can tell ! 

No other cloud, and the air so still ; 

Almost seemed it a miracle ; 

And that the cloud was going with me. 

On to the beautiful country! 

Every day to be there ? 

Always ; be it foul or fair ! 

Every day to be up in the sky ! 

In storm, and lightning, and blinding rain, 

On the desert sands, or the sands of the sea, 

Or on the broad wave of the rolling main, 

The beautiful cloud to be company ! 



THE MORNING WATCH. 115 

And behold it was so ! come weal or woe, 
The little white cloud was to go with me, 
And always, by day and by night, must stay, 
Because of the perils of the way. 

Oh Heaven is kind, to those who trust 
In its loving kindness ; — we are but dust ; 
But God who careth for the sparrow, 
He bringeth the sun for our to-morrow ; 
Bringeth it even while it is night ; 
And whatever weather it bring below, 
The summer rain, or the winter's snow, 
And however dark it look on high. 
It is all bright in the upper sky ! 

And now, in this high mountain country. 

Seeking a rock, 
Such as the torrents would not sweep away ; 
I builded an altar ; laying up block upon block, 



116 THE MORNING WATCH, 

From loose rock fragments, which around 
Lay scatter'd on the ground ; 

And I builded the wall 

Square and pyramidal ; 

North, south, east, and west, 

Four divers ways the altar faced ; 
Then upon the basement, broad and deep, 

That whoso passing by that way 

Might read them plainly. 

These words I traced : 
" Go on, oh traveller, with the day. 

Tarry not — press on, press on ! 

Behold this gateway 
The mountains through : It shall lead thee 

To a beautiful country, 
Where iS the day continually. 

Tarry not — press on ! press on !" 

Then (seeing I was girt about, with arms 



THE MORNING WATCH. 117 

Protecting, safe from all alarms) 

While the great sun went down the glowing 

west, 
And in the cooling east came up the round 

full moon, 
I tarried all that summer afternoon, 

Finding sweet peace and rest : 

Sweet peace, calm rest, 
Within the shadow of the cloud, 
Far from the great world crowd. 
Housed from all care, all sorrow ; 
And with a bright hope gilding my to-morrow, 

Finding sweet peace, calm rest, 
In the deep sleep of those who know not fear ; 
The happy sleep of those who wake to see 

Around them pleasant company ; 

And to hear 
Sounds of welcome and good cheer ! 



118 THE MORNING WATCH. 

So all happily passed the day, 

This first bright day of the journey ; 

Waking at last — behold ! 

Distant, but yet near, 

Night was upon us ! 

Night, starry and cold ; 

Night, the home of fear ; 

Whose shadows over the landscape stealing, 

As with some fell intent. 
Bring to the heart the feeling 

Of judgment ! 
The feeling of judgment and the wrath to come ! 

Not so to us, the pilot cloud and I ; 

For now all things were chang'd ; and to us 
Even the dreaded night was beautiful : 
Oh beautiful the night and glorious ! 

For doth it not bear us nearer to that home. 
Whither we journey : nearer that bright sky 



THE MORNING WATCH. 119 

In the far away country, 
Where is no night, on land or sea? 

So through the mountain gateway we 
Marched on to that far away country. 
And the moonlight play'd in the bending tree, 
All night long in the bending tree ; 
And the whispering wind went hither and yon, 
While ever, as those whose aims are one. 
With the same footstep, light and free, 
The banded stars march'd on ! 

Like the knights of old, going down to the wars, 

I caught the step of the banded stars ; 

And while the moonlight played in the tree, 

All night long in the swaying tree ; 

And the whispering wind went hither and yon, 

With the same grand movement, light and free. 

The cloud, and the stars, and I march'd on ! 



120 TIIK MORNING WATCH, 

On, on, on, 

As into that infinite vista, which ever 
Opens and openeth, onward forever, 
Unto the morrow which is there. 

The morrow, within whose shadow we 
Go down to our eternity ! 
There overtaking it. 
There new making it ; 

Where all shall be one and the same forever ; 

To-morrow, yesterday, and to-day. 

And now a new wonder : 

Behold, the night under, 
A pathway, like as a thoroughfare, 
Printed all over confusedly, 
As thousands of thousands had gone by. 
The foot of the child in the step of the old ; 
The print of the timid, the wary, the bold ; 



T HE M O U N I N G WATCH. 121 

And of some who seemed hasting on swiftly, 

to meet 
Some friend, or a home in the distance to 

greet; 
So light was the print of their delicate feet, 
Scarce touching the ground, as already were 

wings 
Lifting them on in their journeyings. 
And printed and mingled however confusedly, 
All moving onward, all pointing on westerly, 
And seeking all, doubtless, that far-away 

country. 
Where night cometh never on land or sea ! 

Then I said to my soul, fear not, — 
Fear not ; of whatever bereft : 
But for the days we travel together, 
Oh, let us not turn to the right or the left ; 
But through all weather, 



122 THE MORNING WATCH. 

By day and by night, 
Cling to this way. 

Behold, the sun ! It wandereth not in heaven ; 
For all things are so ordered in the sky, 
In less or larger circles, that no one. 
Save Him who only hath dominion, 

Can wander from the pathway given, 
Unless so wandering, — to die. 

For whatso of created things willeth 

To die, loving not life, but death ; 

Having no joy in being ; no delight 

In the quick pulses of this throbbing breath, 
And in the light. 

And in the loving glory of all things ? 

This also, God permitteth ; 
But henceforth it must be 

As a star gone from its pathway ; 

A thing apart ; — ^left to its own way. 



THE MORNING WATCH. 123 

And mastery. 
It must go unto its kindred ; 

And they are dead : 
It must lie down beneath God's curse ; 

It must make its bed 
Amid the ashes of the universe ! 
And this must be its everlasting home ; 

Where not the morning ever, 

Or the day, shall come, 

But night, night forever ! 



III. 



One morning early, in the month of May, 

I paus'd upon a solitary height, 

Which south, and east, and westward, far 

away 
Beneath the rounded circle of the night, 
(Through mountain-passes, which as portals 

were, 
Unto the outer amphitheatre. 
To other mountain-passes, opening on 
That other world, over the horizon ;) 
Look'd down on upland valleys, and broad 

lands, 
And rivers winding into distant bays ; 
And bays that open'd into broad-arm'd seas ; 
While pure and spotless (as in ancient days, 



THE MORNING WATCH. 125 

When came the angels down to spots hke 

these), 
All brightly underneath, glisten'd the sands 
Of a small lake, which crept the hills between. 
As if for rest within that shelter'd scene. 
The sky was high, and cold ; — only the haze 
Of distance, rested on 
The far-off horizon. 
All else was clear, and bright ; like one 

Who slept with eyes wide open, 
River and valley, glen and mountain-lake, 
Seem'd still, and voiceless all ; but broad 
awake ! 

As usual, like the friends you count upon. 
The Heavens were open, like a starry crown ; 
The same old ante-diluvians that saw Cain 

Slaying his brother at the altar's base. 
And founding there the battles of his race ; 



126 THE MORNING WATCH. 

Who saw the first ship launch'd upon the sea, 
And smil'd upon the earth as it was born 

again, — 
The patriarch-companions — the ancient ones, 

and fair, 
And firstlings of all time, they all were there ! 
Close underneath them, like a drowsing flock. 
The snowy mountain-tops look'd closely by, 
And glaciers, many-arm'd, were climbing high, 
Where table-lands, and platforms of high rock. 
And weather'd battlements, look'd down. 
As from the ramparts of some old wall'd town : 
While nearest to the Heavens, and over all, 

arose 
A pure and spotless coronal of snows. 

And seeing all this glory underneath 

The broad old Heavens, such as one would say 
Should ever make the coming of the day 



THE MORNING WATCH. 12Y 

A song of jubilee and mirth ; 
Therefore I said unto the hstening earth : 

Oh star begirt and beautiful in might ; 

That rollest on thy pathway, silently 

As points thy rounded shadow down the abyss ; 

Widening for ever into outer space ; 

An everlasting, ever widening night — 

Is there not joy to thee in thy wild race. 

That thou art silent ever ? Or is there One, 

Ancient of Days, 
To whom, with all the stars, thou utterest 

praise 
And hallelujahs voiceless unto us ? 
Oh beautiful in might, and glorious ; 
On whose broad bosom, ever, day by day, 
The light and darkness alternate for aye, 
Hand-lock'd for ever, and shall ever be, 
Till on the white sands of that unknown world 



128 THE MORNING WATCH. 

Within the portals of eternity, 
They, going divers ways, shall part and meet 

no more — 
Knowest thou the travellers that ride on with 

thee 
And like those chasing shadows, ever more 

Press on to that dim shore ? 
Thou, rolling on ices, through the light and 

shade, 
That flash and glitter as with winter stars ; 
Belted with burning mountains ; thy ribs made 
All firm with adamant, and iron bars. 
Silver, and gold, and gems, and precious stones; 
They, 

Made of thy common clay, 
Bound up in brittle bones ! 

Knowest thou these people? how they 
suddenly 



THE MORNING WATCH. 129 

Grow pale beneath the heavens, and are old, 
Ere yet the half of all their days is told; 
But still press on, with flags and banners, gay 
As life itself were but a holiday ! 
Finding, alas ! no rest, no peace, no home. 
Till dropping by the way-side, wan and cold, 
They strive no more ! And therefore, some, 
Bearing on stoutly, and with brave pretence, 
Though all around is unseen pestilence. 
Are looking onward to a life to come. 
Of whom yet some go all unwillingly, 
As to a sacrifice ; — and some, with fear 
And trembling, have no true life here ; 
And some go smiling, as in pleasant dreams ; 
Which yet are not dreams all, but cloth'd upon. 
With truth's most radiant beams. 
These look up joyfully from the desert-strand. 
Having a, Friend, they say, who hath pass'don, 
And waiteth for them in a distant land. 



130 THE MORNING WATCH. 

Some are gone mad, — and up through dun- 
geon bars 
Are winking, and gibbering, at the winking 

stars ; 
Some are all wild with joy (which also is 
A kind of madness, in a world like this) ; 
And some, with broken hearts, make no essay 
To stay their quick flight down the shadowy 

way, 
But lifting wasted hands, ask but to go, 
That peradventure, in some other clime. 
These lips grown pale, and cheeks all blanch'd 

with woe. 
May smile again as in the olden time ! 

Oh many-zon'd, and radiant with stars. 
Hast thou the ear of Heaven ? Has the Most 
High 



THE MORNING WATCH. 131 

Commun'd with thee apart ? Look — canst 

thou see 
Down-wandering beneath a starless sky, 
A lone world, founder'd on a silent sea, 

Whose unseen currents, ceaselessly. 
Are setting swiftly into outer night : 
The night of outer Darkness, and Despair! 
And see'st thou the crowded voyagers there ; 
How fixedly they gaze upon that darkening sea, 

As on some mystery, 
Which yet they must explore, whate'er it be, 
Though Death and Hell were standing at 

the door ! 
And see'st thou the few sad watchers there. 
Crowding the mast-head, and the o'erhanging 

spars, 
Looking far out 
Upon the waste, and up where once were 

stars, 



132 THE MORNING WATCH. 

If but for one more gleam, 
One gleam of mercy on the rushing stream, 
One last look at the sweet Heavens, ere they 

Have faded utterly, 

And are seen no more ! 

While the rabble-rout. 
The thousands and ten thousands, shout 

" Down ! Downward forever !" 
Nor lift their gaze from off that darkening sea. 
Nor ask for any change ; but ever 
Shout " Downward, down forever !" 

And see'st thou, all other worlds above. 

And beautiful within the arching blue, 
A world, on whose bright banner broad unfurl'd 
Is written " Joy," and " Peace," and " Love," 
" My peace I give to you." 
A world, whose morrow. 
Like to-day, knoweth no sorrow ! 



THE MORNING WATCH. 133 

And thou, Oh Earth, from whose fair bosom 

curls 
The white mist, cHmbing to a purer air, 
And in whose lowest depths, hovers, and 
sinks, the breath 
Of pestilence, and death, — 
Oh ! art thou peopling those wide-sunder'd 
worlds ? 
The one with glory, and the one despair ! 
Thou round Earth, — speak to us ! 
We listen for thy words. 

Then instantly a round, rich voice, and cleai*. 

And sonorous, as a clarion. 
Rang in the frosted atmosphere. 

Like thousands all in one. 

Oh dreamer, look to the light ! 

Doubt not it will come, as cometh the sun. 



134 THK MORNING WATCH. 

Brighter, and purer, and more serene. 
For the few dark hours that pass between. 

Dreamer, look to the Hght ! 
They say I am old, that my veins are cold, 
That my years are only in thousands told ; 
And wise men, pondering marks of age. 
Foretell the close of my pilgrimage ; 
But they go down to their silent home, 
And I wheel on ! Oh, I make no stay 
With the shadows of things that have pass'd 

away, 
And I take no thought of the time to come. 
But ever and aye, with new delight, 
I roll in the flash of the stainless light, 
While before and behind, the solemn old night. 
Retreating and chasing, is ever in sight ; 
Dropping the stars, all cold with dew, 
As the manna was dropp'd, of old, to the Jew, 
Wherever a bird, in love with the sky, 



THE MORNING WATCH. 135 

Is looking aloft, as the day goes by, 
Or flower asleep, in its shut perfume, 
Is waiting the gloom of the night to bloom ; 
Wherever, instead, were cruel unkindness, 
Famine and pestilence, madness and blind- 
ness ; 
Wherever is waiting a hope unblest, 
Wherever the dying are sighing for rest ; 

Thus lingering never, 

But ever in motion, 

And onward, forever. 

With earth and ocean, 
With forests, and mountains, and rocks 

asunder, 
With clouds and tempest, with lightning and 

thunder, 
With old broken columns, and ruins laid low, 
Temples and pyramids built long ago, 
With the numberless dead that are lying below, 



136 THE MORNING WATCH. 

"And the living who shortly shall be so," 
I spring forever, with new delight. 
Out of the darkness into the light! 

Thus said the voice, and at the moment, flew 
As might an angel, down the white air through, 
And glittering as an angel, or a star. 
Swift- wing'd, and flashing to the dark below, 
A blue and white rob'd avalanche of snow. 
And with no shock or sound, but silently, 
Tossing its plumes and wheels of spray, was 
lost amid the sea ! 

Then I arose, and while the morning yet 
Linger'd at orient ; and not yet had set 
The fairest of the lookers-on in heaven ; 
And piercing through the sharp and pulseless 

air, 
All round the shoulder'd multitude 



THE MORNING WATCH. 137 

Of ancient mountains silent stood ; 
Silent and hush'd as at an evening hearth, 
When all the house are called unto prayer; 
Made this my answer to the night-crown'd 
earth. 

Oh flesh and blood of countless millions! Thou 
That art the dust and ashes only of a race, 
Born to the venture of uncounted years; 

Thou nursery of the universe, 

And few days' dwelling-place 
Of life, that's deeper than the life of stars, 

Whose Past, though but the rounding 
of a day, 

Pierceth the Onward of eternity ! 
A Life that shall outlive the curse 
Of Hate, and Vengeance, and the lowermost 

Hell! 
Of Hate, and Vengeance, and the woe 



138 THE MORNING WATCH. 

Unutterable ! 
Thou sayest well! 
Thou sayest well, oh Earth, but canst not speak 

The secret that I seek. 
God hath not utter'd it ; — how canst thou 
know ? 
I must look otherwhere than here ; 
Farther, and higher go ! 
For not the stars, most dim and ancient, they, 

That in the lapse of ages gone, are grey 
And hoar with age, that magic word can say ; 

The secret of man's sin and woe. 
God hath not utter'd it ; — what star doth 

know ? 
But thou, oh sun-bath'd world, roll on ! 
Thou knowest not the secret which I ask ; 
Thou knowest not the burden which thou hast ; 
The crushing, damning weight thou earnest ; 
But well thou doest thy allotted task. 



THE MORNING WATCH. 139 

Low-kneeling, ever, on the flashing rim 
Of this thy pathway ; — as about God's throne 
Worship the Cherubim ! 

Oh born of beauty perfect as the light, 
While yet the day rides with thee, — and the 

Night, 
The wonderful and star-crown'd Night, as 

now, 
Layeth its matchless beauty on thy brow ; 
And day and night, sweet music make for thee 
The mountain-passes and the sounding sea ; 
And while from out thy nostrils, as a breath, 
The lightning playeth beautiful as Death ; 
And storm and tempest chase thee, like the 

Day, 
About the windings of thy trackless way, — 
Roll on — roll on — roll on ! 



140 THE MORNING WATCH. 

But listen ! for the time shall be, 
When down the arches of Eternity, 
Men shall remember them of thee. 
Dimly, and far away, remember thee, as one 
Who hadst a little rolling ground in space. 
Where wheeling lightly round a central sun, 
A few swift thousands thou hadst run, 

In that wild race, — 
Then suddenly had ceas'd ! 

So like a pageant of a night, 
A darkness, and a borrow'd light, 
Shall thy life be ! 
For it is written, there shall come a day. 
When thou as parchment shalt be roll'd away ; 
And thy bright path in Heaven, nevermore 
By man or angel seen ; — and nevermore 
Shall morning come to thee, or noon, 
Or the sweet visitings of night ; 
The snows of winter, the warm touch of June, 



THE MORNING WATCH. 141 

Or last, the golden light 
Of Autumn, robing for the lowly grave ; 
These all, with thy dominion, as a power 
And separate glory, which He gave 
Who made thee at Creation's hour, 
Shall in a moment of thy rounding flash, 
Cease ; — and thou no more ! 

And I shall witness it — oh Earth most fair, 
Most beautiful, — oh earth most rare ! 
And God shall make for me another home, 

Where in the calm of its eternity 
I shall anew begin the life to come ! 
I shall anew begin the life that evermore 
shall be ; 
For I am of the breath of God, oh Earth, 
And live forever ! 

Thus I replied — and down the mountains came 



142 THE MORNING WATCH. 

All calm, and mute, the silver-and-rose-tint 

flame 
Of the morning ! Beautiful ! 
Beautiful upon the shelving mountain-sides, 
And down the chasms, where the white mist 

rides ; 
The white mist, wonderful to see ! 
Beautiful upon the fountains, and the dim 
Outline of Ocean, whence the distant hymn 

Rises continually ! 
Beautiful as is the coming of the Spring ; — 
As is the dawning of a hope ; — 
As is the trying of a wing 
For Heaven ; — when you feel the old world reel 
Away below, and see the stars down-spring 

To give a welcoming ! — 
As is the smile of a young child sleeping 

Where violets spring ! — 
Beautiful beyond all picturing ! 



THE MORNING WATCH. 143 

Wherefore, I pray'd — Oh cleanse me from 

all sin, 
All doubt and pride, and fear, and strife within. 
And make me even as the morning, thus 
— Oh God of the sun-light — pure and glorious ! 

Then all in the stillness of the Dawn, 
The little white cloud and I pass'd on ! 



IV. 



Since that bright morn the years, the long 
long years, 
Have come and gone, and still I travel on ; 
And still the hopes and fears — 
The hopes and fears which cannot severed be, 

They travel on with me. 
But never have I doubted of that land 
Whither I journey — never of that peaceful 
shore, 
Whither a small white hand. 
Evermore, 
Beckons me onward from the crowd — 
Beckons me from the pilot-cloud. 
Likewise, undoubted visions I 
Sometimes have of that bright sky, 



THE MORNING WATCH. 1 1 .' 

Lifted from all mortal fear, 
I breathe a wondrous atmosphere, 
And continually, perpetually, 

A glory doth surround me, 
In that soft, pure air. 
'Tis the light which liveth there ! 

This with seeming glory crowns me. 

Giving peace unto my soul, 

Peace, peace, calm rest and peace ! 
Oh, no doubt, it is that country, 

Which the old man told to me ; 
No night, said he, on land or sea ! 
No night upon the gleaming land ! 
No light upon the sapphire sea ! 

Some say that I am mad ; some say 

I am as one who walks in sleep. 

But whom some angel charge doth keep, 
7 



146 THE MORNING WATCH. 

While he goes wandering on his way, 

Thinking the night is day: 
Goes chasing phantoms on his way, 

Mistaking night for day. 

I travel on ; I tarry not ; 

My peace, my rest, my home, my lot, 

Are cast in a country far away. 

I travel on ; I tarry not ; 

But unto all I say, 
Lo ! we shall meet again one day, 

However diverse our travel be. 
All meet upon one common shore ; 
Then who is dreaming, who is mad, shall be 
Made clear of mystery forevermore ; 

Forever, forevermore ! 

Then shall appear 



THE MORNING WATCH. 147 

The foolish and the wise men all ; 
The madmen and the dreamers all ; 

Oh ! not as here ; 
But gathered in one vast company ; 
And the waking, and dreaming, the true and 
the seeming, 
The sane and the mad — they all shall be 
Seen without mystery, on that day. 

Oh, tarry not, tarry not, make no delay, 
Let us get onward while yet we may, 
Away, away, tarry not, tarry not. 
For as God liveth, fast cometh that day. 

But who will preside ? (say they to me) 

Who will give judgment ? 

Can any one say ? 

For all things must be 
Adjudged that day in fairness and equity. 



148 THE MORNING WATCH. 

Then I reply : — 

God will be there ! 
Christ will be there ! 
He who hung on the Cross will be there. 
He will preside ! 
He will give judgment ! 

Oh, tarry not, tarry not, make no delay, 
Let us get onward while yet we may. 
Away, away, tarry not, tarry not, 
For as He liveth,fast cometh that day ! 



V. 



Who leads the Night ? \^ho hath the 

Morning Watch ? 
Who is it ? who ? that hath the Morning 

Watch ? 
For swiftly, swiftly, now the Night speeds on ! 
No guiding hand is seen : no pilot nigh : 
No voices on the deep : no chariots upon 
The arching firmament, the Night lead on : 
No tread of footsteps on the cold grey sky ; 
The one grand movement, trackless all, and 

still : 
The helm that guides it is a Master s will! 

As in the presence of the Living God, 
With a deep awe, the traveller look'd abroad 



150 THE MORNINa WATCH. 

Upon this onward movement of the night ; 
The far, dim, mountain ranges, and the sea: 
Then suddenly, but calmly, thus again spake 
he: 

My friend, the story of my life is told : 
For now I think that I shall see no more 
The flashing of the sunlight on the shore ; 
No more the sunset glory, as of old ; 
For now a sudden darkness doth enfold 
Me, and the light — the pure bright light — 

God's hght 
Is gone ! My friend, I see thee not ! 
But look forth thou, and say how wears the 

night : 
Look well, and note if there be any change 
Eastward the mountains, where the southern 

range 
Crowds high the climbing sea. 



THE MORNING WATCH. 151 

See'st thou the spot ? Oh tell me if there be 

A bright star standing far apart, 

Above the breakers, in that sky ; 

For by the flush of warmth about my heart. 

The morning must be nigh. 

Would it were so ! Alas ! I see" no change, 
Unless it be that all things look more strange 
And vision-like ! The air is like a breath. 
Which, beating pulse-like, soft and low, 
Comes whispering a tale of woe. 
And hath the chill of death ! 
I look abroad upon the whispering air, 
Eastward the mountains, and upon the sea. 
But see no gleam of morning anywhere, 
And in the sky I find no traveller. 
But with the same calm step, and free, 
Night moves grandly on as ever ; 
Bringing only in the breeze 



152 THE MORNING WATCH. 

The cry of the sea-bird coming landward, 
And the dashing of the seas ! 

No Hght — no star of the morning yet ! 
It matters not : for till the sun shall set, 
And rise upon the world, to rise no more. 
Ever the morning beautiful shall come. 
And bring its gladness, like the light of home, 
And crown the Heavens with its joy and peace ! 
Since the last sunset, many a buried year, 
Golden with mornings, hath uprisen here, 
As from the dead : now, even as the dead, 
Let them again be buried. 
All things move onward ; even now I hear 
A murmur as of wings, and voices near ; 
And pictures pass before me of a country far 

away. 
Good Night ! my friend ; I will now rest, and 

sleep ; 



THE MORNING WATCH. 153 

I will go travel in that distant land, 
Until the coming of the day ; 
And if I wake not soon, yet let me sleep ! 
And if I rise not soon, yet let me stay ; 
For I love the sunny pictures of that country 

far away ! 
But I would sleep not with the Heavens alight ; 
Oh look thou upward, in the farthest deep, 
Beyond the shadow of the Night : 
Is there no light, no glory there ? 
And list ! the music on the air ! 
Sweet voices, hear you not ? 

lilook, but see no light; and save 

The breaking of the long sea- wave, 

I hear no music, no sweet voice ; 

Ah no ! 

Alas ! alas ! this night of woe ! 
1* 



154 THE MORNING WATCH. 

Oh God, our hearts are sad and low ; 
Christ have mercy upon us ! 

Amen ! amen ! 
Christ have mercy upon us ! 
But hush, my spirit ; do I not see 
The mountain-tops, that by the sea, 
Look up so calm, and peacefully ? 

•(Oh Angel, leave me not) 

And far belovi^. 

Doth come and go, 
Over the distant hills doth come, 
The vision of my own bright home ! 
And list ! I hear the murmur light, 
Of the mimic seas, that up to the breeze, 
Rise with a tone of deep delight, 
And dash their little life away. 
In gambols on the sun-lit bay ; 



THE MORNING WATCH. 155 

(Good Angel, leave me not) 
Oh vision of my home, again 
As cooling waters to the brain, 
Again the everlasting snows. 
Lie pure upon the mountain-brows ; 
While far below the sunbeams flash 
On avalanche, and iced parterre, 
And a thousand plunging torrents dash 
Their spray, and music, on the air ! 

(My Angel, leave me not) 
And again, the light, the voices sweet, 
Away, away, oh far away. 
Do I not see their flashing feet ? 
Do I not hear the voices say, 
Away, away, oh far away — 
" The night is past, cometh the day." 
Away, away, oh far away — 
" The night is past, cometh the day !" 

The day! Tub day! My Angel! 



156 THE MORNING WATCH, 



He sleeps ! speak to him, and let us see 
If he will wake. Ah no ! he will not wake. 

For, did he not say 
He would go travel in a distant land, 

Until the coming of the day ? 

And now 'tis daybreak 
All abroad upon the hills, and on the sea, 
And yet he rests, how calmly, and wakes 
not! 

He is not pain'd, think you ? 
He hath no care, no trouble now ? 

How brave he looks ! 



THE MORNING WATCH. 167 

I think an angel may look thus in heaven, 
He is so grand and beautiful ! 

My friends, no doubt, this man, this traveller, 
Hath now gone onward to a distant shore. 
And will return not here. 

We need not wait for him ; 
For while the worlds bowl down the glittering 

deep, 
And the great sun wheels on his bright career, 

He will return no more. 
But cometh a morning, when from this deep 

sleep, 
Waking, this flesh and blood shall rise again; 

And rising, put on immortality ! 
Oh then, as now, my friend, may thy look tell 
Of rest, and peace, and joy unspeakable ! 
Till then, thou star-companion, rest thee well ! 

Oh rest, rest, sleep on ! 



<i)u\[m nf tljB 3larr^titI^ 



©utline of ti)C !>i[<ivvatii)c, 



PART THE FIRST. 



The scene is in a tropic land, upon a higli bluff 
overlooking the sea. 

The coming of Night is announced. 

And a traveller from a distant country asks if the 
night be very fair. 

Tlie voice replies that the night comes silently, and 
that a small white cloud is seen in the ofRng, with 
which the lightning is at play. 

Also that the night doth foreshadow to the guilty a 
long night of terror and dismay. 

But to some it promiseth a beautiful morning, in a 
land where is no care or weariness, or any sorrow ; for 
it is the Infinite God who ruleth both day and night. 

Then the Traveller replies that this is doubtless that 
country to which he is journeying. 

But moved thereto by a sudden and mysterious im- 
pulse, he calls upon God to stay the night. 



162 OUTLINE OF THE NARRATIVE. 

But the night travels on. 

Then the traveller comforteth himself tliat the stars 
— and the gentle wind, which now, after the tirst chill 
of the evening, is warm and pleasant again, — will go 
with him on his long journey. 

But suddenly his limhs fail him, and he, perforce, 
must tarry there for the night. And as the spirit 
of prophecy doth sometimes come to those who are 
about to depart hence, so now it seemeth to him his 
hour is approaching. 

Pointing to the stars, he showeth the stranger how 
securely we sail among them, for God keepeth them, 
each in his allotted place, so that no harm cometh to 
any. 

But, nevertheless, there is pain, and weariness, and 
infinite distress under these beautiful skies, as do know 
even the brute things of the earth. 

Then the traveller proposeth to the stranger that he 
will recount to him the history of his life. 



II. 

He begins with a description of his native country 
and his early home — a pleasant land. 



OUTLINE OF THE NAKRATIVE. 163 

And the dwellers therein lived happily, wondering 
much and cheerfully liow all things were so fair and 
good. 

Then came a messenger to them, saying that all this 
visible world is not eternal, but was created in old 
time by One who still careth for it, and giveth it con- 
stantly life and motion. 

Then behold appeared upon all things a beauty and 
glory greater than all other before, and they became a 
language which told them constantly of that Great Be- 
ing. So that in all time they seemed to be walking 
in His presence — the presence of the Most High — the 
Wonderful — the Almighty — the Ancient of Days. 

And the morning and the evening seemed like the 
going and coming of His angels. 

A mother prayeth for her child. 

And often at even-tide she sings a song of a beauti- 
ful country, far away, where is no night. 

But as the knowledge of evil tempts one to know 
and be familiar with it, so now, other agencies — evil 
agencies, — were about him, for whom that daily prayer 
was offered, meeting him in all things and in all places. 

Veiling their own wretchedness and woe, they put 
on the guise of sadness and a touching melancholy, 



164 OUTLINE OF THE NARKATIVE. 

alternating with an unnatural life and vivacity ; and at 
last they lead him away. 

But before he leaves the boundaries of his home, he 
pauses for one last look, and behold, one looking like 
an angel is kneeling on the margin of the sea, motion- 
less and speechless, looking calmly up into the blue 
heavens. But as one gone mad, he turns suddenly, 
and the world and the dark nitjht receive him to their 



III. 

The traveller enters the world of action and trial — 
the crowded streets where the living and the dead pass 
silently, and no one saith, " Good Morrow," or " How 
is it with thee 1" for the dead, observe, are of no 
account. 

He descants upon tlie evils of the world, and hath a 
vision of a great battle on the plains of Hungary. 

The traveller apostrophizes the world, likening it to 
the ancient Nineveh, which lieth all mute and still 
under the sands of the desert. 

And above this great city, now under the sands, 
other generations come up and build their tombs, and 



OUTLINE OF THE NARRATIVE. 165 

lay them down to their last sleep ; and again the sands 
drift about the walls, and while tlie blue heaven arches 
above them, they all slumber on together. 

But the time shall come when this great city and 
the great world itself shall stand in the presence of 
the Most High, and as the beautiful paintings in buried 
Nineveh do fade at the first touch of the light and the 
air, so at the breath of God the glory of this world 
passeth away and is seen no more. 

The traveller returns to the account of his life, which 
now had become evil continually. Living, therefore, 
not in unison and harmony with nature, all the visible 
world gradually changed to him, and became, as it 
were, dark and threatening. 



IV. 



On a bright morning in the autumn-time, the travel- 
ler goeth into the fields, seeking a holiday ; and there 
appear to him visions of his better days. 

Old faces come crowding about him, old songs are 
sung again, old prayers are uttered, half unconsciously, 
until he hears some one say " Amen." 

And walking down the lawn, with tlie mountain- 



166 OUTLINE OF THE NARRATIVE. 

brook which discourseth incessantly with him, he en- 
ters an ancient wood ; and nowhere does he find the 
disturbing elements which make up the strife and con- 
test of the great world, but all is calmness and self- 
possession, and a speaking, or silent joy. 

He considereth the beauty of the tree : which having 
no thought^ to do other than the will of God, silently 
executes it; and for the beautiful light and the 
showers, and the night dew and the pleasant ah', it 
returns all which it hath, and which they have made — 
its flowers and fruit. This is its thanksgiving. 

Again appeareth to the traveller other visions : and 
pictures of his past life, with a sad music, pass before 
him. He reflects that these pictures, though faded, 
will one day be revived and their color made per- 
manent ; and he discovers how discordant is all that 
life with the beauty and harmony of the external 
world. 

And he returns to his home in the mountain 
valley. 

But his home was desolate ; the mother's prayer 
had been answered. 

As a year before he had looked down upon that 
country, almost in madness in the sight, so now ap- 
peared to him again, but in vision only, the robes of 



OUTLINE OF THE NARRATIVE. 167 

white, the pale lips, the folded hands, and the up-raised 
eyes, looking into the still heaven. 

Then a great sadness falls upon him. 

He lieth by the sea-side, and in sleep see'th a strange 
world, which, though it sailed among others that were 
very fair and beautiful, was itself, and of its own 
choice, as it were, an outcast among them. 

He looks upon the inhabitimts of that world, and 
their silent wretchedness, which is very terrible. 



The traveller wakes from sleep on the shore of the 
sea, and finds himself again in a world of life and 
action. 

But now it is no more a world of joy and beauty. 
Almost as one gone mad, he wanders about the land. 

But he remembers unconsciously how all things 
seemed to him in his early days. He knoweth that 
Nature is kinder than man, and, with a kind of instinct, 
he stays among the mountains and by the sea. 

With the spirit of a little child, he listens to what 
they say, for they are seldom silent, and if silent, it 
seems like the silence of prayer. 



168 OUTLINE OF THE NARRATIVE. 

Suddenly he imagines that all this beautiful worship 
is for him, and for a little while he rests, and is at 
peace with all things. 

Elate with his new-born happiness, he saith unto 
his soul, " We will sin no more." 

The traveller goes back in memory to that morning. 
He apostrophizes his home, and lives again in imagina^ 
tion through the long night of fear and dismay. 

With a mingled yearning and horror for his past 
sins, which still crowd about him in the silent night- 
watches, he barreth out the stars, for they are cold and 
pure, and have no sympathy with evil. But in the 
morning-watch these spirits depart, and there enters 
the Presence of One long since departed. The tra- 
veller knoweth then that angels are about him, and he 
sinks to rest. He saith, now I will dream of the 
happy land. 



KntfcluOe. 

While the traveller discourseth of his life, the night 
steals on. There are a few stars yet in heaven, and 
the little cloud is still there, but is looking light and 
ethereal. It is now the mid-watch of the night. I 
doubt if the little cloud will be seen much longer ; it 
is rising higher and higher. Already the stars gleam 
through it. Before the morning, doubtless, it will 
have gone. 

And now if there be here any spirit of ill, let it 
depart hence. There is a place for such, but it is 
not here. 



FART THE SECOND. 



I. 



TaE traveller returns again to the life-narrative. 

Telling of an old man who lived in the mountains, 
Who describes to him a wonderful country far away in 
the west. 

There is no night tliere, but always the day ; always 
the morning ! so that the beautiful light stayeth and 
dwelleth perpetually with all things. 

And he sitteth all the long night under the open 
heavens, thinking of that country. 

And now he remembers the song, sung so often in 
the olden time by One now departed, which told of this 
same country, the far away country, the beautiful 
country over the sea. 

The traveller resolves that he vidll set forth in search 
of it. 

The morning comes. 

And a little cloud sails out upon the sky, and goes 
on slowly towards the west. 



OUTLINE OF THE NARRATIVE. 171 

The traveller leaves his home, and where the little 
cloud stood poised over an upland range, he says to 
tha,t land his last good bye. 

n. 

He now enters the wilderness. 

And at mid-day reaches a higli mountain pass. 

And looking down on the country which he had 
left, behold the little cloud was not there, but was 
poised as before overhead. 

It was wonderful ; for there was no breath of air in 
the sky, and no other cloud. 

The traveller doubtpth if it be a cloud or a vision 
only. 

And with a prophecy which proves true, he guesseth 
that the cloud may be going with him on his journey. 

And it was even so. 

Then the traveller buildeth an altar between the 
mountains, and rests for the day. 

But at nightfall he continues his journey, when, 
behold a bright path opens before him, where are the 
prints of innumerable feet — the feet, as he imagines, of 
those who have gone before : no doubt, in search of the 
same country. 



172 OUTLINE OF THE NARRATIVE. 

The traveller discourseth upon the way which is 
given to all, the path in which we must walk, and that 
life and death are matters of choice to all beings, death 
consisting chiefly in being left to one's self, abandoned 
of God, in whom all things that live have life. 



m. 

In the course of his long journey, the traveller pauses 
one morning before day-break, and looks abroad upon 
a wide range of sea and land. 

And he discourseth with the earth. 

The earth replies, but vaguely. 

Then looking forward to the time when the earth 
must pass away, the traveller declares that God will 
build another home for him, where will begin the life 
immortal. 

Then comes the morning, and praying that he may 
be made pure, like the light, the traveller and the bright 
morning travel on together. 



IV. 

And now many years have gone since that bright 



OUTLINE OF THE NARRATIVE. 173 

morning, but still he travels on, not doubting of the 
country to which he journeys. 

For the little cloud is with him always. 

And often he has visions of that land which the old 
man told to him — the " far away country, the beautiful 
country, where is no night, on land or sea." 

Some say that he is mad ; some say that he is a 
dreamer; but whom some angel guards from all harm. 

But he travels on ; saying to all, that we shall meet 
again, and then will appear who are the madmen and 
the dreamers. 



It is now the morning watch, and the traveller, 
ha\ing concluded the story of his life and journey, 
asks the stranger to look forth again, and see if there 
be any sign of morning, for a sudden darkness sur- 
rounds him, and he surmiseth that his hour of 
departure is at hand. 

The stranger replies that the night is still moving on 
grandly as ever, and nowhere is any gleam of morning. 

The traveller cheereth and comforteth the stranger, 
that the morning, the beautiful morning, will surely 
come : it will not fail. 



174 OUTLINE OF THE NARRATIVE. 

But whether, as by the coming of death, or by the 
solemn stillness of the night, and the strange history of 
this strange man — the stranger is appalled and over- 
powered with the awfulness of the scene. 

But now an angel taketh the traveller away to his 
early home, and there, in vision, he seeth again the 
mountains, and the sea, and the beautiful home under- 
neath the hills. 

And he heareth voices which call to him, and which 
say, " the night is past, cometh the day" — fer away, ffti? 
away, they call to him, " the night is past, cometh the 
day." 

" The day ! the day !" Ah, without doubt, the long, 
long journey is now nearly over ; one step more, and 
now the traveller is entering that wonderful country, 
the beautiful country, the far away country, " where is 
no night, on land or sea !" 



OUTLINE OF THE NARRATIVE. 175 

Will the traveller return ? shall we see him again ? 

At some distant day he may return ; but now we 
need not stay — it is irrevocable : he is gone. But in 
that country where he now dwells we may see the 
traveller again. Oh be strong, be strong: fear not. 



THE END. 



s ^ 



1 



s\M 



^^ 



